This isn't really a
review of
Wonder Woman since I agree with, and have little to add to, the consensus of reviews out there (if you want real internet reviews, here are a couple from
Chris Stuckmann and
Andre the Black Nerd). However, I did have a few observations.
First, I'm astonished that the concept of a major action movie with a female lead is such a novelty as to be widely remarked upon. Really? It's been 31 years since
Aliens. If that didn't lay to rest any concern about female action heroes being able to draw audiences, I don't know what would. But apparently some in the movie business still had their doubts.
They should put those doubts aside, because after just 11 days in theaters the movie
has made $444.8 million and is still going strong. It has also, of course, been widely critically acclaimed (deservedly so) and has even
won an award for its trailer. One thing that struck me is that while star Gal Gadot is certainly attractive, the character is not over-sexualized to the point of absurdity, as these types of female characters sometimes are (though Ripley 31 years ago was even less sexualized). This may be the result of the fact that the director is also a woman, Patty Jenkins, who gives the character the same dignity that similar male characters get -- although any halfway decent male director should be able to do the same.
Though this movie has aroused
much enthusiasm among female fans, there's nothing anti-male about it. Steve Trevor (Chris Pine) is also a strong and effective character, not diminished or intimidated by acting as an ally to a biologically-superior female. Of course I personally loved all the Classical Greek references, even if the actual Classical Greek culture was heavily male-dominated.
If the film has been something of a breakthrough for women-centered art, the now-inevitable sequels may break representational ground in another direction. DC revealed last year that
Wonder Woman is bisexual, and
Gadot seems cool with that. The current movie makes no reference to this, but later ones could. Some viewers might object, I suppose, but as I always say, the world is full of people who disapprove of things;
Lebanon and
Tunisia have actually banned the current movie because Gadot is Israeli and once served as a combat trainer in the IDF. I expect a substantial circulation of bootleg DVDs in those places.
It is perhaps small of me to point out a minor error in the film which no one else seems to have noticed, but which really jumped out at me. Here it is -- can you spot it?
The movie is set in 1918, at the end of the First World War, but the map on the wall in the scene where Wonder Woman attacks Ludendorff clearly shows the outlines of the postwar occupation zones imposed on Germany after the
Second World War. No 1918 map would have shown demarcations that did not exist until 1945.
Of course that's a trivial point. It's an action movie that's far more than just relentless explosions (one of the best action scenes is a battle of small arms vs. archery on a Themyscira beach) and helpless damsels in distress. If Hollywood truly harbors neanderthals who doubt that women can handle this kind of material, they surely know better now. I look forward to future adventures from Gadot and Jenkins.